The Real Patients of Medicaid: Teraca

Teraca Price is expecting her sixth child. She is covered by Medicaid, but has no regular doctor.

In her second trimester, she said learned she was pregnant after visiting the emergency room for stomach pain and sore teeth. Teraca says she and her children go to clinics for care and says she goes to the emergency room two to three times a year "when she feels sick."

Teraca is like many Medicaid patients who do not have a relationship with a regular physician. Had she had such care, she might have been more inclined to schedule an office visit for symptoms such as stomach pain and avoided the expensive care she got in the ER, where she said her pregnancy was diagnosed.

Research shows that Medicaid patients are twice as likely to visit the ER than non-Medicaid patients. The inefficiency forces Medicaid to cut expenses elsewhere, such as reimbursements to private physicians who then become disinclined to accept new Medicaid patients. Michigan Medicaid pays doctors 42 cents on the dollar, said Avik Roy, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute who is an expert in health care and Medicaid.

A study on the program in Oregon published by the New England Journal of Medicine found "no significant effect" of Medicaid coverage in important health areas. Meanwhile, other states, like Indiana, offer plans that inject more competition into the system, saving money while offering coverage.

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